Tony Le Tissier, the final governor of Spandau Prison in Western Berlin, describes the confinement and eventual death of Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hilter's Deputy and the last of the prisoners to be held at Spandau.
The author reveals for the first time his wartime journals as a young army officer assigned as an aide-de-camp to Adolf Hitler's last two army chiefs of staff.
Presents a comprehensive analysis of the forty-year dispute between the Soviet Union and the Western Allies over the fate of top Nazi officials held prisoner at Spandau Prison in Western Berlin.
food, politics, and everyday life in World War I Berlin
Davis, Belinda Joy
2000
Examines the influence of the civilian populace on German domestic and military policy during World War One, and focuses on how the German government reacted to food shortage riots in and around Berlin in 1916-1917.
Describes how Berlin's Jewish Hospital survived as an institution where Jewish doctors and nurses cared for Jewish patients throughout World War II without being taken over by the Nazis.